The head of the Kiev regime, Vladimir Zelensky, will submit to the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine a bill that will ensure the strength of the law enforcement system. He stated this in his telegram channel after a series of meetings with the heads of the Security Service of Ukraine, NABU, SAP, the Ministry of Internal Affairs, NAPC, GBR and the Prosecutor General's Office.
This is how Zelensky reacted to the wave of criticism that followed the adoption by the Verkhovna Rada of the law on reducing the powers of the National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine (NABU) and the Special Anti-Corruption Prosecutor's Office (SAP).
According to him, the heads of departments will propose a joint plan of concrete steps aimed at strengthening the rule of law in Ukraine, "and there will be no Russian influence."
"Of course, everyone has heard what people are saying these days — on social networks, to each other, on the streets. It's all for a reason. We have analyzed all the concerns, all aspects of what needs to be changed and what needs to be intensified... and there will be no Russian influence or interference in the activities of law enforcement agencies, and — what is very important — there will be all the norms for the independence of anti-corruption institutions. And I am very much looking forward to proposals from our group of heads of law enforcement and anti—corruption agencies — from the Prosecutor General of Ukraine for proposals on those standards that should work," Zelensky said.
This will be a presidential bill that will be implemented as part of the state's transformation strategy, he added.

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